With about 40% of organizations being inundated by over a million event alerts a day, and 11% receiving over 10 million alerts a day; the only way forward is a massive change in infrastructure.

IT concepts or protocols have usually been built with the notion of grouping or hierarchy, instead of dealing with a flat list of entities. The continued innovation of IT-powered service allows different departments to work in concert delivering overall optimized performance. Events-related functionality: alert and event correlation need to be streamlined to improve productivity.

How is this accomplished?

Grouping generic alerts

Establishing a generic alert for all your production routers makes it possible for any router whose connection is interrupted immediately to generate an alert.

Grouping alerts for a single incident

Aggregating multiple alerts for a single related event into a bucket known as ‘incidents’. This allows grouping multiple alerts as one actionable incident and logging all alerts for that particular incident to be filed under that. This allows the focus to be on managing the incident and getting the system up and running rather than being inundated by the alerts.

Creating specific route protocols for incidents and alerts

Usually alerts flow to a single inbox or team. This leads to an overflowing inbox and a resulting confusion on how to resolve the issue. Establishing routes for the flow of incidents and alerts simplifies this by redirecting specific alerts to specific personnel or teams best equipped to handle them.

Categorizing alerts

Differentiating between critical alerts, warnings, and information would enable personnel to prioritize which one to tackle first and in what order.

With information on the alerts, resolution of mission-critical alerts will be a high priority rather than spending time working on information alerts. Workflow for different alerts will awareness about the kind of alerts being received. In concert with alert aggregation, this will help in bringing down the number and volume of alerts by alerting personnel only on critical alerts or alerts that require action.

Alerts console

The alerts console provides an intuitive, visual display in real-time of the latest goings-on on your monitoring system. This covers changes in status, new incident creation, or alert triggering, new circumstances are reflected on the events console. Each of these changes provides detailed, additional information such as date and time, log, and severity. In addition, an alert console allows you to access the history, infographics and all pertinent information associated with the element that triggered the event. This further allows personnel to interact with both the systems and their operations group, or others.

Manual remote actions such as assigning or changing an owner, modifying a status or pinging a host to check if they are mounted can be extended and customized to integrate them with other applications.

CloudFabrix will streamline your IT team with data-driven recommendations allowing them to manage priority tasks rather than wasting time in handling everyday tasks. This will help to save both money and time. The long-term impact of AIOps on IT operations will be transformative.